Well I based my bitrates on what my pioneer DVD player reports.. Its shows the VBR bitrates in real time... and they do in fact peak at nearly 9000 kbps on a few of my discs.. I admit that those discs will momentarily freeze on my other phillips player.. so those discs may not be fully compatible. I just popped in the Madonna dual layer DVD this morning and my Pioneer is showing the bitrates at 5.5 all the way up to 8.8 Mbps and probably stays in the high sevens for most of the time.. So according to your logic.. My Pioneer must be wrong.. and reporting false information. I tryed a U2 disc and it ranged from 5 to 10. The pioneer bitrates keep moving up and down with the VBR playback.. Not sure if that is accurate.. but according to you.. its wrong.
Also my reports about HD bitrates are based on what HD file sizes I am seeing on Usenet.. since that is the only place I know of to view those files at the time being, as we all know, there are no HD DVD's to compare to at this time.. Today I saw twister HD 1080i about about 12 gigs... This is a ts file so I am not sure what format that is in but probably a very high bitrate mpeg 2. I saw dual, sin city, spider man, and about 20 others that are in 1080i running from around 9 to 13 gigs a piece.. A few in WMV HD but most are in ts format.
I did try one 43 minute clip at 720p XVID AC3 5.1 on my PC which is only 1.5 gigaherzt and it studdered like mad.. As far as streaming HD to network player that is based on one of the few network players that can stream a ts file.. The Avel Linkplayer2. I based my comments on fast chips to do this from users that actually own this player.. Many recommended a 3 GHZ machine to stream 1080i ts files on the Avel. Most of the Avel users reported issues with Wifi streams... so that is where I based that info from.. not from thin air. Even Intervideos new software recommended 2.8 GHZ for WMV HD look here: http://www.provantage.com/intervideo-bwvd7p3f0uf0010000~7INTV00H.htm
Intervideo states: System requirement: Processor: Intel Pentium III 500 MHz (Intel Pentium 4 1.0 GHZ processor recommended) for trimensiondnm function: Pentium 4 2.8 GHZ recommended for WMV HD playback: Pentium 4 2.4 GHZ (Pentium 4 3.0 GHZ recommended) for H.264 File playback: Pentium 4 3.6 GHZ recommended,
T2k, I am sure you will argue that point as well.. but Intervideo is probably one of the most respected DVD playback apps that have been around a long long time.. I hardly am pulling numbers out of thin air here.
Its states 2.4GHZ but recommends 3 GHZ for H.264 playback. My point is that I did not pull my numbers out of thin air as you say.. I really don't want to argue this point anyway.. If you believe your numbers are more correct... fine.. I only base what I said on the research I have done. So far there is not much content and hardware to base any HD on.. But the files that I see on the net run around 11 gigs for a movie.. that runs around 100 minutes. 43 minute TV shows can run well over 3 gigs. Obviously, it would not be practical for Yahoo to stream those huge files.. that would choke alot of internet connections.. But from everything I have read, it does in fact take a very fast CPU to stream 1080i and ts files to a network dvd player.. and my amd 1.5 cpu can't do HD WMV... but maybe I need to install some filters or something.. it just studders. Basically, I have read on at least a dozen sites and several users that fast pentiums are needed much of the time.. But there may be other codecs or compressions of HD that I am not aware of that can run on slower boxes.. I am convinced that my box will never be fast enough for HD playback.. If you think otherwise T2K, then enlighten me on the players and codecs I should use to playback on a 1.5 GHZ amdXP chip.
At any rate, I don't think your way of pulling apart posts is very constructive and I have noticed you have done that to others on this site. You pretty much stated I am wrong on all counts so I guess I really don't care what you think about my research on HD.. I doubt it would be very contructive anyways.
Also my reports about HD bitrates are based on what HD file sizes I am seeing on Usenet.. since that is the only place I know of to view those files at the time being, as we all know, there are no HD DVD's to compare to at this time.. Today I saw twister HD 1080i about about 12 gigs... This is a ts file so I am not sure what format that is in but probably a very high bitrate mpeg 2. I saw dual, sin city, spider man, and about 20 others that are in 1080i running from around 9 to 13 gigs a piece.. A few in WMV HD but most are in ts format.
I did try one 43 minute clip at 720p XVID AC3 5.1 on my PC which is only 1.5 gigaherzt and it studdered like mad.. As far as streaming HD to network player that is based on one of the few network players that can stream a ts file.. The Avel Linkplayer2. I based my comments on fast chips to do this from users that actually own this player.. Many recommended a 3 GHZ machine to stream 1080i ts files on the Avel. Most of the Avel users reported issues with Wifi streams... so that is where I based that info from.. not from thin air. Even Intervideos new software recommended 2.8 GHZ for WMV HD look here: http://www.provantage.com/intervideo-bwvd7p3f0uf0010000~7INTV00H.htm
Intervideo states: System requirement: Processor: Intel Pentium III 500 MHz (Intel Pentium 4 1.0 GHZ processor recommended) for trimensiondnm function: Pentium 4 2.8 GHZ recommended for WMV HD playback: Pentium 4 2.4 GHZ (Pentium 4 3.0 GHZ recommended) for H.264 File playback: Pentium 4 3.6 GHZ recommended,
T2k, I am sure you will argue that point as well.. but Intervideo is probably one of the most respected DVD playback apps that have been around a long long time.. I hardly am pulling numbers out of thin air here.
Its states 2.4GHZ but recommends 3 GHZ for H.264 playback. My point is that I did not pull my numbers out of thin air as you say.. I really don't want to argue this point anyway.. If you believe your numbers are more correct... fine.. I only base what I said on the research I have done. So far there is not much content and hardware to base any HD on.. But the files that I see on the net run around 11 gigs for a movie.. that runs around 100 minutes. 43 minute TV shows can run well over 3 gigs. Obviously, it would not be practical for Yahoo to stream those huge files.. that would choke alot of internet connections.. But from everything I have read, it does in fact take a very fast CPU to stream 1080i and ts files to a network dvd player.. and my amd 1.5 cpu can't do HD WMV... but maybe I need to install some filters or something.. it just studders. Basically, I have read on at least a dozen sites and several users that fast pentiums are needed much of the time.. But there may be other codecs or compressions of HD that I am not aware of that can run on slower boxes.. I am convinced that my box will never be fast enough for HD playback.. If you think otherwise T2K, then enlighten me on the players and codecs I should use to playback on a 1.5 GHZ amdXP chip.
At any rate, I don't think your way of pulling apart posts is very constructive and I have noticed you have done that to others on this site. You pretty much stated I am wrong on all counts so I guess I really don't care what you think about my research on HD.. I doubt it would be very contructive anyways.
Last edited: